Showing posts with label 3star. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 3star. Show all posts

2016-11-25

The Trip

Editor’s note : a big thank you to Olive Films for the promotional copy of this Blu-Ray release of this cult classic.


The Trip (Roger Corman, 1967)

Paul Groves (Peter Fonda), a television commercial director, is in the midst of a personality crisis. His wife Sally (Susan Strasberg) has left him and he seeks the help of his friend John (Bruce Dern), a self-styled guru who's an advocate of LSD. Paul asks John to be the guide on his first "trip".

Often cited as the worst film of all time, The Trip is a gem that reflects the spirit of its time. This experiment, cause filming those kaleidoscope drug trips permitted to lead to Dennis Hopper’s Easy Rider also starring Peter Fonda and Jack Nicholson who wrote The Trip. Fonda’s performance is interesting and well nuanced in this extravagant film that has a look of the 1960’s of Michelangelo Antonioni’s Blowup with the depiction of free sexuality and rock music.

2016-11-22

The Monster Of Piedras Blancas

The Monster Of Piedras Blancas (Irvin Berwick, 1959)

The monster, which looks like a nastier version of "The Creature from the Black Lagoon," invades a sleepy lighthouse town. The superstitious lighthouse keeper is worried for the safety of his beautiful teenage daughter, so he leaves food for the monster, who dwells in a nearby cave. When bodies wash up ashore, the locals take notice.

2016-09-21

Snoopy, Come Home


Editor’s note : a big thank you to Paramount Home Media Distribution for the promotional copy of this Blu-Ray release of this animated feature classic.

Snoopy, Come Home (Bill Melendez, 1972)

Snoopy travels to see his sick former owner and then feels obliged to return to her permanently.

From the Peanuts’ creator and writer, Charles M. Schulz, Snoopy, Come Home is another great rendition of Schulz’s unique amazing observations of life. One of the only setbacks is the fact that Vince Guaraldi was not the composer of the musical score for Snoopy, Come Home.

2016-02-10

Titanic

Titanic (James Cameron, 1997)

A seventeen-year-old aristocrat falls in love with a kind, but poor artist aboard the luxurious, ill-fated R.M.S. Titanic.

2015-12-07

The Wings of Eagles

This post is part of the “Try It, You’ll Like It!” Blogathon, hosted by Sister Celluloid and Movies Silently, where we write about “gateway films” that might bring non-classic-film lovers into the fold!

The Wings of Eagles (John Ford, 1957)

A biography of Navy flier-turned-screenwriter Frank W. "Spig" Wead.

In the shitload of films John Ford and John Wayne made together, most of them were Westerns and this is mostly what the collaboration between the two men is now remembered. However, they also made many war films like They Were Expendable. The writer of this feature film was Frank Wead a retired Army man also a friend of John Wayne. So ten years after the death of Wead in 1947, Ford and Wayne made an homage to the once pilot and screenwriter with a movie based on his life.

2015-10-24

La Roue


Note : this review is a contribution to The Silent Cinema blogathon hosted by In the Good Old Days of Classic Hollywood and Lauren Champkin.

La roue (Abel Gance, 1923)

Sisif, a railwayman, and his son Elie fall in love with the beautiful Norma (whom Sisif rescued from a train crash when a baby and raised as his daughter), with tragic results.

2015-10-16

The Double life of Véronique


The Double life of Véronique (Krzysztof Kieslowski, 1991)

Two parallel stories about two identical women; one living in Poland, the other in France. They don't know each other, but their lives are nevertheless profoundly connected.

2015-09-02

A Short Film About Love


A Short Film About Love (Krzysztof Kieslowski, 1987)

An innocent virgin spies on his frontal neighbor and falls in love with her, thus starts using tricks on her which he hopes will lead to them meeting.


2015-08-27

Elena et les hommes


Note : this review is my participation to The Wonderful Ingrid Bergman blogathon hosted by the wonderful Virginie at The Wonderful World of Cinema.

Elena et les hommes aka Paris Does Strange Things (Jean Renoir, 1956)

Polish countess Elena falls in love to a French radical party's candidate, a general, in pre World War I Paris, but another officer pines for her.

This French Technicolor fresque about a time where gallantries and polite high society was manners and courtship, we follow the Polish princess Elena, a superb 41 years old Ingrid Bergman who looks like her mid twenties, as a debonair woman ready for amusement and entertainment.

Bergman seems to be in her element as a princess in a Renoir world of Paris and high society. She shines on the screen and her presence is elegant, naive, sexy, and lovable. It was her first film after her departure from her husband Roberto Rossellini and we see her as a new woman. She seems liberated and despite having been broken from this relationship she is still a star and the camera simply loved her.

Elena and Her Men, is not Bergman’s one-woman show despite the presence of Jean Marais and Mel Ferrer. It is a Jean Renoir film and another vignette of his Paris and his France. His films are a visual storytelling of his land and the way people lived and were during his child life. Most of Renoir’s stories are influenced by his childhood in Paris and his later films were his reconnection with his motherland. However, it was not his best depiction of the nostalgia of a memory and the story seems to be too much centered on Bergman’s character and not enough on the politics of France and the implications it could have done.


The story and its treatment is too light for us to really care for the issue of anything but Elena. While Renoir’s most celebrated films had the lenght and depth to reach for greatness, Elena and Her Men is a nice little love story on a political back drop. 
As a huge fan of Jean Renoir and Ingrid Bergman I would suggest to give it at least a watch because both were at turning points of their career having already legendary credits they have had superb careers. For classic film lovers, Elena and Her Men is a delight and may not be a great film but a nice Technicolor eye candy. 

2015-08-17

1941


1941 (Steven Spielberg, 1979)
Hysterical Californians prepare for a Japanese invasion in the days after Pearl Harbor.

After a couple of blockbuster hits in the Horror genre with Jaws in 1975 and the Science-fiction genre with Close Encounters of the Third Kind in 1977, Steven Spielberg was hot at the box-office. While grossing more than half a billion dollars with the two films aforementioned, Spielberg turned to comedy to make a comedy that was reminding of old tymes like the films of Howard Hawks, Norman McCloud, etc. Well, a comedy that was out of its time.

Despite the presence of the most iconic comedians of the time : Dan Aykroyd, John Belushi, John Candy, Ned Beatty as long with film legends such as Warren Oates, Slim Pickens, Christopher Lee, Toshiro Mifune, Robert Stack and well known names like James Caan and Nancy Allen to name more than a few the film seemed to be a huge pot of anything. Even with the writing work of Robert Zemeckis, John Milius, and Bob Gale Spielberg’s lack of real natural touch for comedy has at the start failed 1941.

Not being a total train wreck does not save the film from being a mess. Scenes after scene the plethora of characters isn’t really connected neither really engaging. Some of the best scenes are with two of the greatest actors of all time Toshiro Mifune and Christopher Lee in the Japanese submarine. For the rest, some riots and the Hollywood boulevard scenes are directed with Spielberg’s mastery, however it’s still not enough to elevate the whole and achieve an Airplane or a Mel Brooks level.

Since there are many characters, there’s a waste of talent like Belushi who has to act again like an animal. Aykroyd might probably the most interesting character and Candy could have been bigger on this as well.

Even if Spielberg made a lesser film with his try at comedy with 1941 it didn’t stopped him from getting back on top with his excellent Raiders of the Lost Ark two years later.  More than thirty five years after its initial release, 1941 has now earned a cult status and is an alien in Spielberg’s filmography. One of the few comedies he ever directed and one of the lowest rated films he ever made. It is indeed a curiosity and if you are a fan of the director you might give it a watch but don’t expect huge belly laughter.


2015-07-16

Vacation (1983)

Vacation (Harold Ramis, 1983)

The Griswold family's cross-country drive to the Walley World theme park proves to be much more arduous than they ever anticipated.
For almost twenty years I’ve been watching year after year Christmas Vacation and saying to whomever that cares to listen that it is my favorite Christmas movie. But I have never seen the other movies of the franchise and even the original Vacation film that will have some kind of a remake this summer. Since this summer my wife and my daughter will embark on a car trip, not to Walley World but to Wildwood New Jersey, I had the urge to finally watch Vacation and see what it was all about.

Back in 1983, it had a huge box-office success and quickly became a cult classic. Still to this day I can’t figure why I haven’t seen this film on TV before. Clark Griswold (Chevy Chase) and his wife Ellen (Beverly D’Angelo) along their two kids Rusty (Anthony Michael Hall) and Audrey (Dana Barron) will go on a trip from Chicago to Los Angeles to the famous Walley World park, a ripoff of Disney Land.

Many moments of the John Hughes story are repeated in his Christmas Vacation and makes them like trademark jokes of the franchise. The infamous visit to cousin Eddie and Catherine will become stellar moments just like the pool scene with the girl in the red Ferrari.

The couple of Chevy Chase and Beverly D’Angelo works well because Clark wants to be a good father, a good husband but he is so lefty and wants everything to be so damn perfect that everything is screwed up and she embarks on his mad ideas with a certain disdain but she loves her goofer husband so much that it reminds us of all of our dads and how we are as dads too.

The real genius behind the Vacation franchise is John Hughes and his writing makes it the best imperfect family. It reminds us how the road is half the fun and how the ups and downs makes it for great family memories. Sure it is reflecting a very late 1950’s idealized America but nostalgia and memories are hard to split at some point.


Overall, Vacation is a fun ride with the Griswold family and may or may not have influenced another well known American family : The Simpsons. I think that many elements link those families together and I wish that the Vacation series would be as everlasting as The Simpsons and maybe keep a level of quality that the cartoon did not achieved past a certain number of years.

2015-06-09

Entourage

Entourage (Doug Ellin, 2015)

Movie star Vincent Chase (Adrian Grenier), together with his boys Eric (Kevin Connolly), Turtle (Jerry Ferrara), and Johnny (Kevin Dillon), are back - and back in business with super agent-turned-studio head Ari Gold (Jeremy Piven) on a risky project that will serve as Vince's directorial debut.

With eight seasons and 96 episodes the HBO series is now put onto the big screens which it displays its inside world of the emerging career of a young movie star from Queens to Hollywood and his three buddies tagged along.

While HBO did the same formula with Sex and the City and released two films that were far from the original tone and feel of one of the most popular and cult series, with Entourage they however managed to keep the original episodic buddy humor and kept pretty much the same formula. What works for Entourage is the dialogues, the exuberant Ari, the ridiculous Drama, the always picking of the guys on each other and the times they have together. The storyline is an accessory and we couldn’t care less. What’s important here is to be with our old friends and have a good time whatever ever happens. At first, the film delivers considering those elements. Fans of the show won’t be disappointed because the characters are still true to them self and engaging.

But, since we are in a film and not everyone has watched the show I believe that the story is weak and in a way not that important for the film. Just as the show was in some ways. Some of the film’s storyline are thin and the whole story of Eric doesn’t make any sense. At some point in the show it was one of the most important character and he is relegated with a bad writing decisions issue.

The real star of Entourage has always been Ari Gold with his legendary outbursts and anger management issues. Again he is true to himself and Piven is giving him the best he has.


Overall, Entourage is a nice return for the guys of the show but maybe not its best publicity. Definitely, I suggest that you watch the show before getting into the film. This might help getting some of the inside jokes and the whole mood of the story. For the fans its nice but not great and it even make us wish the show has never ended.

2015-04-07

India Song

India Song (Marguerite Duras, 1975)

Poetical tale of Anne-Marie Stretter, the wife of a French diplomat in India in the 1930s. At 18 she had married a French colonial administrator and went with him on posting to Savannakhet, Laos. 

Visually stunning and populated with long shots of almost still life or still lives, India Song is rhythms only by its voice overs and the musical tracks. It plays as bits of a life of boredom into Asia that its screenwriter/director Marguerite Duras has probably took from her own experience in the Eastern World. It is also a piece of History that reminds the role of the Colonialism countries in the World. Just like the scenes in Francis Ford Coppola's Apocalypse Now Redux with the French living in Vietnam. They are a strange oddity of upper-class in such a poor and distant world.

India Song is the kind of film that gives lots of time and space for its viewer to think, contemplate, get immersed in the story. However, the contemplative element of the film reminds us of how a film can be that much slow and, in fact, almost standing still. As a self proclaimed film historian and movie critic, I had my share of slow and contemplative films but in this case there are few camera movements and long, long, did I mention long takes? Well, there are many long takes in this film. It is beautiful to look at and a lot of style in the way it is done. 

But, it is so slow that it plays as watching a painting and reading a realist novel of the early last century. The composition of the frames must have been studied for weeks and just like Carl Th. Dreyer I'm sure every movement was synchronised and rehearsed. India Song, plays as a novel that was written to be felt by its words and filled with pretty pictures of grand compositions.

As a whole, India Song feels like a artsy film that brought a few number of viewers in and a fewer number out at the end. Has my first encounter with Marguerite Duras, I'm not sure if I'll ever get excited and jolly about seeing another of her films. Not that it was bad or anything but it was a demanding film that uses its own storytelling way and narratives.

2015-03-18

Kumiko, the Treasure Hunter


Kumiko, the Treasure Hunter (David Zellner, 2014)
 


A jaded Japanese woman discovers a hidden copy of Fargo (1996) on VHS, believing it to be a treasure map indicating the location of a large case of money.

Just like Fargo itself, Kumiko, the Treasure Hunter is based on a true story. Well, it is what it is stated when entering into each film.

Staring beautiful Japanese actress Rinko Kikuchi as Kumiko this Zellner bros (David and Nathan Zellner) film captures by its plot line but does it delivers as much as its promises?

First off, this is a beautiful contemporary film with high contrasted colors. It is visually stunning with Kumiko’s red coat that sparks just like the blood on the snow in the infamous scene of the wood chipper in Fargo. In fact, much of the Coen bros’ film aesthetics is recognizable as an influence or an inevitable copy to keep us in the right mood that links both films together.

Kumiko’s conquistador quest is interesting, heartfelt, and well balanced funny. However, a lack of writing elevates this from the good level of independent cinema of nowadays. The danger when a film links to a high esteemed film, and in this case a masterpiece like Fargo

I liked that they linked both films with the same opening of true events inspiration. As many knows, Fargo weas not based on a true story. Why? This is how the Joel and Ethan Coen are, they know how to manipulate the viewer to make him believe or care for insignificant things. Gifted storytellers do this, they can lead us anywhere they want with the most ridiculous characters. In the case of Kumiko, there’s another level but it never goes as far as a post-modernist study of the stupidity of the human race.

This is the real danger when making a film with an interesting storyline or a great starting idea. I’ve seen numbers of films that showcase a great starting idea but that have a less than average ending. Many things can elevate a good story to a great story, but an average story needs better writing and Kumiko suffers mainly because of its middle of the road writing.

Still, this is a beautiful film that was made with good values and a will to be quiet but efficient independent reflexion of a lost woman in the modern world.


2015-02-27

Chef


Chef (Jon Favreau, 2014)

A chef who loses his restaurant job starts up a food truck in an effort to reclaim his creative promise, while piecing back together his estranged family.

After a series of big budget blockbusters (Elf, Zathura, Iron Man, Cowboys Vs. Aliens) actor/director Jon Favreau did an attempt at the road movie/independent feature film all done with extensive budget and cast with Chef.

The story line is pretty obvious and there the old saying of nothing new under the sun could easily be used. It is more in the execution and cinematography that it makes a movie that gets you hungry with superb shots of food making. As a foodie myself I was salivating for the food and I must admit having an ever lasting crush on Scarlett Johansson who’s now a regular Favreau player. Along with John Leguizamo, Sofia Vergara, Robert Downey Jr., Oliver Platt, Dustin Hoffman, and Emjay Anthony Favreau makes an honest film about passion, family, redemption, and staying true to yourself as a person.

Just as Favreau said in interviews, he was very proud of his casting and it is one of the reasons that there are no real low points in Chef. Every scene as a more than capable actor in it. The young Emjay Anthony sure steals the show if you ask me, well if you are reading this you are in a way asking me my opinion, he is genuine, in control, and fits well with the rest of the veteran cast. Almost as a parallel to his father, portrayed by Favreau, he is the reason why his father won’t be a failure and as soon as they embark on their journey we know that something is going on. Again, nothing new under the sun but it is an honest attempt at a modest goal that he achieves with great means. Is it gonna be on my year end list? Probably not in the top ten but it was not a bad time to be with these characters and visit those places; Miami, Louisiana, California, etc.

Sure it is filmed with good sentiment and without a doubt it is a feel good movie. But it is a nicely executed feel good movie just like his grilled cheese. It is a high end grilled cheese, looking good and I would eat it but at the end it is still a grilled cheese but never pretends to be anything else either.

2015-02-12

A Midsummer Night’s Sex Comedy


A Midsummer Night’s Sex Comedy (Woody Allen, 1982)

A wacky inventor and his wife invite two other couples for a weekend party at a romantic summer house in the 1900s countryside.

With a series of masterpieces like Annie Hall, Manhattan, and Stardust Memories in the late 1970’s and early 1980’s, actor-director Woody Allen would go on and fell into a more serious state of mind in the themes and stories of his films. With A Midsummer Night’s Sex Comedy he went back on the more comedic side of his craft. Obviously inspired by Ingmar Bergman’s Smiles of A Summer Night, the great Swede’s unique comedic success, Allen’s film doesn’t deliver at the level of his aforementioned films or of his inspiration.

Staring himself, Mia Farrow, Mary Steenburgen, José Ferrer, Julie Hagerty and Tony Roberts A Midsummer tells the story of ancient lovers, new love and missed opportunities. Well, some of Allen’s regular themes. Brilliantly shot by legendary cinematographer Gordon Willis we have in place many elements that could have made it a great movie but instead it fells flat and redundant at times. Allen seems to be forcing to get comedic elements into his already comic plot to justify the fact that he has the actual word comedy in the title of the film. However, with his aforementioned successes, he proved he can make intelligent comedy without the physical comedy of his earlier films. The line between romance, comedy, and drama is weirdly crossed in A Midsummer and it makes many awkward scenes and as the viewer I felt distant to those characters. Maybe the countryside is not favorable for Allen and he is more inspired by the city and urban settings.

As a genuine enthusiast of the films of the Woodman, it was the only directorial credit that I needed to watch from his prolific 1980’s decade of great films. My expectations were moderate but I was hoping to get a little gem but not a masterpiece. It is an average to good film but it never really gets on track and works for me. It is a difficult film to rate because its execution with the cinematography is faultless it is more on the content that it stumbles and drags. Although, later in his career, Woody Allen will direct a bunch of worst films that could help make this one feel like a nostalgic piece of the greatest era of his work.

2014-10-03

Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull


Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull (Steven Spielberg, 2008)

A fourth instalment of the franchise has been in the rumors for many years and even its director Spielberg himself thought he could produce and let the directing wheel to another younger filmmaker. He was thinking that he was in a whole other place as a director since the series began in 1981. Let’s say he couldn’t more right about it.
Once, Steven Spielberg was an inspired young director not taking himself too seriously and he actuallly let the fun, the humor, and the entertainment take more control of his films. It was all for good when you watch Duel, 1941, Raiders of the Lost Ark, E.T., Jaws, Close Encounters of the Third Kind, and Jurassic Park. The later was probably the last Steven Spielberg film. With Schindler’s List, Spielberg became Mr. Spielberg and he became this serious filmmaker taking under his wing the whole Second World War flicks genre with Saving Private Ryan and producing the overrated Bands of Brothers miniseries. Something was permanently shut in this director’s mind and serious subjects like Munich and Lincoln were his work. No more playground like the sets of Jaws. With some interesting glimpses here and there with Catch Me If You Can, Artificial Intelligence, and Tintin could not save the strained seriousness of this once amazing director.

With all that said, since it is in the air of the time to bring back 1980’s films and franchises with sequels or remakes, because more bankable than risky projects, the timing was right for Indy’s comeback. Set in the Cold War this time, this is arguably a nice blink of an eye to the fans of the series with obvious links with the precedent films and reprisal of entire scenes. Even cinematographer Janusz Kaminski was trying to imitate Douglas Slocombe’s aesthetics. Does it work? Indeed, the first sight of the classic fedora, the original score of John Williams still gets you into the mood.

But it felt a lot like they were trying to make an Indiana Jones movie more than they were making one. Fans of the series could have do the same without Spielberg, George Lucas, and company. Still, reviews and the public felt it was a poor fourth film and even Shia LaBeouf was not its greatest defender. Saying he lost respect in the director he once admired. One would say the young actor is not shy of provocative declarations but one have to give to Mr. LaBeouf the fact that he says what he thinks and thinks what he says.

It was nice to have Marion (Karen Allen) back but the whole plot with her and Mutt (LaBeouf) is very tacky and so predictable. Once again Spielberg felt into sentimentality and I don’t think it was for the right reasons.
The whole Crystal Skull element is also a recurrence in Speilberg’s obsession and even if it’s one of the many wacky theories of evolution it is still very far from the adventurous archeaologist’s interests. When in Raiders and Last Crusade Indy was chasing religious artifacts here he is looking for things that scientists would never take seriously. Get back into your history books and dig a little deeper into Humanity’s lost treasures. I’m sure Indiana Jones can chase many other lost bits of History. Just look at Robert Langdon and I’m sure you’ll think about something.
Even Cate Blanchett couldn't save this!

Finally, since my expectations were quite low, I was not that much negative about my encounter with the Crystal Skull. Sure it’s no Raiders but I don’t want the same film again and again. It is like Tintin, entertaining but the original is still the better. Sometimes when a classic is a classic it must rest untouched. A trilogy is always better in three films.

 

2014-09-26

Westworld


Westworld (Michael Crichton, 1973)

A robot malfunction creates havoc and terror for unsuspecting vacationers at a futuristic, adult-themed amusement park.

In a not so distant future, people are traveling to a remote setting where they can experiment the life of three distant past : the Old West, a Medieval court, and the Roman Empire. All of this is controlled by programmers that control robots with humanoid appearance. Much like HAL 9000 in 2001 : A Space Odyssey, the robots eventually take control of the amusement park and drift from the original purpose of the park and becomes harmful for its visitors. Staring Yul Brynner as one of the robots a full copy of his character in The Magnificient Seven, Richard Benjamin and James Brolin as two visitors of the Old West, Westworld is a reference in pop culture and an iconic Science fiction film.

Inspired from the Disney parks and the trademark animatronics, Westworld presents a way to vacation that is not that far from us with the constant eveolution of technologies at the service of humans. It could have been even more interesting to see a social commentary on the fat that the machines were evolved and revolted against humans who serviled them as their slaves. Just like the robot that refuses the advances of one of the Medieval visitors. The technicians see it as a malfunction but it could be a normal reaction for a real woman to refuse the advances of a man.

Director Michael Crichton who also was a succesful author of many novels including Jurassic Park, which is a better twist and exploitation of the concept he explored in Westworld, was one of the reasons why I wanted to watch the 1973 film. There’s also an episode of The Simpsons where they get to the Itchy and Scratchy Park populated with robots trying to kill the family. Those are some of the many reasons why Westworld is worth the look, but as a film this is more on the okay side of appreciation and the ending feels a bit flat.
Crichton wanted his settings to be cliché and almost false or fake to remind us that his characters are in an amusement park inspired by films and the imaginary perception we have of times in History. Just like that old saying from the great John Ford : print the legend. Crichton wanted to create a world where the commentary and the story surpass the sets and the clichés.


2014-09-24

The Princess Bride


The Princess Bride (Rob Reiner, 1987)

Of the many films listed on the IMDb Top 250 there are few that I still haven’t seen. Taking aside the obvious new releases that eventually are bumped by newer films voted by enthusiast movie goers, the classics on the list are common and givens to lots of people. However, there is a blindspot on my side, Rob Reiner’s The Princess Bride.
Added to the fact that I was born in the 1980’s and that it is a children and/or family film, it is a mystery to me why I havent’s saw that film considered by many as their favorite. I’ve seen it on various lists including my ultimate goal as a cinephile : the 1000 Greatest films of all time by
They Shoot Pictures Don’t They. With the back to school event that September brings every year I’ve decided that for 2014 I would do my homeworks and watch a bunch of films I must see as a film connoisseur. The Princess Bride could easily be on top of it. Not that I had really an urge to watch it or a huge desire, it is interesting to discover what the fuss is all about!

Adapted from his novel of the same name, William Goldman presents a story of fairy tales that could easily be compared to a rendition of a tale from the Grimm brothers. With Robin Wright, Cary Elwes, Mandy Patinkin, Chris Sarandon, Andre the Giant, Christopher Guest, Peter Falk, and Fred Savage The Princess Bride didn’t really surpassed my expectations which were very low but I think I can understand why so many people get this movie. It has everything the grand father portrayed by Peter Falk is talking about in the beginning. This is like if you take every component of every efficient family movie out there and condensed it into a 98 minutes entertainment. It is easily bankable and not a very bold move. Add to this a bit of nice comedy and you have a crowd pleaser.

This kind of entertainment is often seen as lesser cinema than dramas or other more serious genres. But it is a nice little film that doesn’t harm anyone and may have charmed many by its innocence and sense of traditional storytelling. However, this is very middle of the road storytelling and reminded me very much of the Shrek series. Charming and funny but not entirely my cup of tea when it comes to films.

Having crosssed that one from list of blindspots I can safely say that it was one of the films I had to watch I was not that much eager to get to. However, when my daughter will get older I might watch it again with her just to discover how she’ll receive it as a young movie buff.

 

2014-09-12

August : Osage County

August : Osage County (John Wells, 2013)

A look at the lives of the strong-willed women of the Weston family, whose paths have diverged until a family crisis brings them back to the Oklahoma house they grew up in, and to the dysfunctional woman who raised them.

Without much introduction this try-out to reach many Oscars nominations at the 2014 Ceremony, the movie earned a leading nomination for Meryl Streep and a supporting one for Julia Roberts, reminded me of a sad recognition of Ingmar Bergman’s Cries and Whispers. The later film, a masterpiece, would forever shadow August : Osage County except for the strong performances from its actresses and actors. With Juliette Lewis, Juliana Nicholson, Ewan McGregor, Abigail Breslin, Dermott Mulroney, Sam Shepard, Benedict Cumberbatch, Chris Cooper, Misty Upham, and Margo Martindale at least we have performances from those A-list actors that deserves the mention of a nice ensemble cast. Too bad, the story isn’t that much well told and the film suffers from the lack of empathy we can feel for any character in this tragic story.

Apart from the sheer confrontation of the many characters between each other and their abusive relationships, this family film is far from the feelgood movie genre. I don’t, however, want a film to be happy or hopeful, but I want a little humanity in the characters I invest time in. In fact, the dysfunctional family pictured reminded me of my own family on my mother’s side. Still, a family that dysfunctional as the Weston is only fictional because this kind of confrontation, abusive, and unhappy family would have been completely apart and they would not have had such a long history. People get sick of situations such as those and children don’t suffer long at the time they come to adulthood and just left those behind.

Well, after all the drama is done and all the damage we are left with a sour taste of a sad family that you never want to revisit again especially if they are your in laws. It demonstrates how the film is okay to watch for the aforementioned performances, but other than that, it is not something you want to own and showcase on the altar of your collection of movies.
Too bad because as the original play was highly acclaimed, the feature film never meet expectations and fell a bit offshore. Worth a look but nothing to write to your mother about.

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